Monday, 29 September 2014

PART 3-EBOLA : “How deadly” , yet easy to deal with!




BY : Kingsley Komla Adom (25-09-14)
 
 Public Views on Preparedness

Having spoken to a few people about how prepared they felt on two levels;personal and national,responses were unanimous.
George seems to think,the hospitals are not ready for the fight at the moment ;
“I honestly don’t feel adequately prepared.Personally,I have been following the news and I have been learning how to prevent contracting the virus.But I still think there’s more to be done.Everyday our hospitals are reporting lack of basic protective gears,and that for me is scary.To think even the health personnel are not fully protected makes me really worried”

According to Elorm,

“the main source of concern has to be the many unapproved routes dotted all over the country’s border towns.What happens if an infected person sneaks into the country on the blind side of the immigration officials?That certainly would open us up for the spread,if they could strengthen the surveillance in these areas,perfect”.

Unlike the West African countries who were taken by surprise by the outbreak and spread of the Ebola Virus Disease,previously scanty information is now detailed and all over the place.

“I certainly know that bats,game and a few other mammals have been described as possible hosts to the virus,so I don’t eat bush meat again.I have my sanitizers in my bag wherever I go,and apply in between the times.And my hand-washing regimes have tripled”, Doreen added.

Early detection and medical response have proven very key,in the management of the disease in affected countries.Christian believes that the construction of isolation centers has delayed way too much,even though he agrees financial constraints could have played a role.

“We heard about the creation of these centers,but I’m yet to learn if they have been completed and stocked with the right equipments.As I speak with you now,if there happens to be a suspected case of the disease here,I don’t know where exactly to take the person,you see,and that’s the challenge”.

As we continue to battle another disease;Cholera,which has also hit parts of the country with over 10,000 recorded cases and a little over 100 deaths,one cannot but wonder if we can be able to deal with Ebola.

“I agree no disease is good,but when you compare cholera to Ebola,obviously the latter is more dangerous.But if we are struggling to contain even cholera,then I am afraid the worst could happen should Ebola find its way into the country” ,a visibly worried Kwaku laments.

The education would continue,the discussions would continue,the public awareness would increase,but most importantly our attitudes and ways of life must change.We as individuals must be alive to our responsibilities and how we must adjust.

Even as the talkers continue to talk,and do less action,it behoves on us to play our own parts to this fight.Nigeria recorded cases,but have succeeded in containing it,Senegal,same (at least momentarily),it shows that it is do-able,if only we apply ourselves the best we have to.

Ebola Background

The Ebola virus disease first appeared in 1976 in two simultaneous outbreaks,one in Nzara,Sudan and the other in Yambuku,Democratic Republic of Congo.The latter occurred in a village near the Ebola river,from which the disease takes its name.

The recent outbreak is the most complex and largest since it was first discovered in 1976.

Ebola Facts:

-Ebola virus Disease (EVD) formerly known as Ebola Haemorrhagic fever,is a severe,often fatal illness in humans
-The virus is transmitted to people from wild animals and spread in the human population through human-to-human- transmission
-The first Ebola Virus Disease outbreaks occurred in remote villages in Central Africa,near tropical rainforests,but the most recent outbreak in West African has involved major urban areas as well as the rural.
-Symptoms include high fever,muscle pain,headache,sore throat,followed by diarrhoea,vomitting,rashes,bleeding from one or many body openings,and central nervous system damage.
-Humans are not infectious until they develop symptoms
-Fatality rate can reach 90%-but current outbreak has mortality rate of about 55%
-Incubation period is two-twenty one (2-21) days
-There’s no vaccine or conclusive cure for the disease
-Ebola is introduced into the human population through close contact with the blood,secretions,organs,or other bodily fluids of infected animals such as Chimpanzees,Gorillas,fruit bats(Pteropididae family),Monkeys,Forest Antelopes,and Porcupines found ill,dead or alive in the rainforest.
-It then spread through human to human transmissions via direct contact (through broken skin,or mucus membranes),with the blood,secretions,fluids of infected people and with surfaces and materials (examples: bedding,clothing),contaminated with these fluids.
-Burial ceremonies in which mourners have direct contact with the body of the deceased can also play a role in the transmission of Ebola.
-People remain infectious as long as their blood and body fluids,including semen and breastmilk.
-Men who have recovered from the disease can still transmit the virus through their semen for up to 7 weeks after recovery from illness
-Early Supportive care such as re-hydrating patients who have diarrhea and vomiting with oral or intravenous fluids,and the treatment of specific symptoms,improves survival and can help recovery.
-There is as yet no proven treatment available for the disease.However,a range of potential treatments including blood products,immune therapies,are currently being evaluated.Two potential vaccines are undergoing human safety testing.
-Community engagement is key to successfully controlling outbreaks.
-Good outbreak control relies on applying a package of interventions,namely case management,surveillance and contact-tracing,a good laboratory service,safe burials and social mobilisation.

Source: World Health Organization (W.H.O)

Author’s advice: Let’s learn how Nigeria and Senegal managed to contain their respective situations and take important lessons from that to aid our own fight!

Lessons learnt from Liberia,Sierra Leone,Guinea,Senegal and Nigeria

While two of the epidemic-hit countries were taken by surprise,others and indeed other African nations must take meaningful cues.

Failed health systems in Liberia,Sierra Leone and Guinea have not helped them either.A wake up call to our leaders in other African countries to effective immediately put the structures in place.

Education is the beginning of the effort to combat the disease.The right and appropriate messages have to be made available to the people,so they are better informed,to prevent for instance the case in remote Guinea,where health workers and volunteers were attacked and killed for fear of rather having come to infect the people with the disease.

Another very important need,has got to be the attitudes and behaviors of the people.A drastic change in our ways of life,tradition,among others must change.
LOTS OF BODY CONTACTS ARE MADE DURING FUNERALS IN GHANA lets cut down on them,

For example,learning from the stories in Sierra Leone and Guinea,handling of dead bodies must change.And people instead of hiding their infected relatives in their rooms,for fear of sending them to what they call,”death centres”,must quickly report to the health facilities,so immediate measures to prevent further spread are taken.

In parts of Nigeria,the long known greeting methods of handshakes and hugs have ceased,you would not find people shaking hands for obvious reasons.Even children have become so aware about the disease and the basic preventive measures to adopt.

Experts have advocated the use of disinfectants and hand sanitizers to deal with a lot of the germs that we come into contact with on a daily basis,but they have been also quick to add that not all products being paraded on the market are truly germ-killing fluids.

About 80% of the sanitizers that have flooded the markets are not as powerful as thought,hence cannot kill all germs.
NOT ALL HAND SANITIZERS CAN KILL ALL GERMS

Health officials say we should patronize sanitizers that  are;

*Approved by the Food and Drugs Authority (met quality control standards)
According to the FDA,as of the beginning of August,2014,only about ten product sanitizers had been validly registered with the outfit.
*Generally germ-disinfecting : that is they can kill nearly all manner of germs (bacteria,virus,protozoa,fungi etc)
*Chemically composed of didecydimethyl,ammonium and chloride and not only alcohol
Health experts have also warned that,the sanitizers be not substitute proper handwashing with detergent and running water.They have advised that regular hand washing in the course of the day is ideal.

Avoid being at overly crowded places,when it is not absolutely necessary to be there.Organizers of conferences and programmes which require the gathering of people,must as a matter of compulsion provide disinfectants and sanitizers at programme venues for use by attendees.
we can avoid being at crowded places;it will help

We cannot emphasize enough that Ebola is real,YES! Wiping away scores of human populations in affected countries,YES! But it can be easily contained if proper systems are put in place and the people are alive to the realities.Nigeria and Senegal at least for now have showed the way,why can’t we?

The Author of this piece is a Journalist in Accra-Ghana.
twitter : @kingsley_komla

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